Migrants now find jobs closer to home

Migrant construction worker Chen Jiankang is on the job on May 1 at the China Zun skyscraper in Beijing.

For decades, many of China's vast army of migrant workers－rural workers who leave their hometowns－had to travel far from their families to seek better jobs. Now, more are finding employment closer to home.

In Chinese statistics, rural workers are people born in rural areas who are not engaged in farming. They are no longer considered rural workers if they obtain an urban hukou, or household registration. Migrant workers are those from rural areas who work outside their hometowns.

Some 2.51 million rural residents joined the migrant workforce last year, taking the total to 172 million, a 1.5 percent rise year-on-year, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

While the increase is no surprise, analysts say what is telling is that 96 percent of the new group chose jobs in their native province, including in the underdeveloped western region, rather than heading further afield.

The trend has developed rapidly in recent years－88 percent of new migrant workers stayed local in 2016. It has been fueled by local governments' efforts to retain labor, rising salaries and changes in the kind of opportunities offered in traditional destinations for migrant workers, mostly on the country's east and south coasts, according to experts.

Zhang Yi, a senior labor researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said it is now much easier for people from the traditional sources of migrant workers－Henan, Anhui, Hubei, Hunan and Sichuan provinces－to find work at home due to the growing economies in these places.

Sichuan, Anhui and Hubei, in particular, have seen an obvious shift in behavior in the past five years, according to a 21st Century Business Herald report. In Anhui alone, 85,000 residents who had previously worked outside the province returned to local jobs in 2017, the paper said.

The trend has coincided with above-average GDP growth in these three provinces, ranging from 7.7 to 8.9 percent between 2015 and 2017, compared with a national average below 6.9 percent, according to NBS figures.

"Better economic growth means more business and more orders for companies in those areas. This of course means a greater demand for workers," said Yang Yiyong, director of the Society Development Institute, part of the National Development and Reform Commission. "So rural laborers have far more options to choose from."

Meanwhile, he said, the traditional destinations for migrants are going through industrial upgrades, leading to a change in what kind of workers are needed.

"Developed regions like the Yangtze River Delta and Pearl River Delta are seeing a transformation in their industrial structures, which means some work can be completed by machines rather than human labor," Yang said. "With fewer low-tech jobs, it's harder for many migrant workers to find jobs in these areas."

Preferential policies introduced by provinces to attract and retain migrant workers have also had an effect. The policies make it easier for them to access social services, start a business or send their children to local schools.